Inman Park Homes for Sale | Vesta Consulting Group
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Inman Park Homes for Sale

Atlanta's first planned suburb, laid out in 1889 by Joel Hurt. Painted Ladies and Queen Anne mansions on Edgewood and Euclid, the BeltLine Eastside Trail running through it, and Krog Street Market a five-minute walk west.

$1,150,000Median Price
54Avg Days on Market
15Active Listings

Live data from FMLS, refreshed every 15 minutes. Based on active listings whose FMLS subdivision matches Inman Park.

About the neighborhood

Why Inman Park Appeals

Inman Park is the original. Joel Hurt laid it out in 1889 as Atlanta's first planned suburb, connected to downtown by the city's first electric streetcar. Hurt is the same developer who, four years later, commissioned Frederick Law Olmsted to design Druid Hills. Inman Park was named for Hurt's friend Samuel M. Inman, the cotton merchant. More than 135 years later, the curving streets, the canopy, and the architectural backbone of the neighborhood are still intact, and the historic district is on the National Register of Historic Places.

What makes Inman Park unusual today is the combination. You have one of the deepest stocks of late-Victorian and Queen Anne housing in the South, including the Painted Ladies on Edgewood Avenue and Euclid Avenue. You have the BeltLine Eastside Trail running directly through the neighborhood. You have Krog Street Market a short walk west, Little Five Points a short walk east, and Old Fourth Ward and Cabbagetown a short walk north and south. MARTA's Inman Park / Reynoldstown station is on the Blue and Green lines. Walk Score and Bike Score are both at the top of intown Atlanta. There aren't many places in the country where a 19th-century streetcar suburb has stayed this walkable and this architecturally intact at the same time.

The trade-off is the price you pay for that combination. Renovated historic single-family stock typically runs $1.2M to $2M, with the largest restored mansions on Edgewood and Euclid pushing well past that. Inventory is consistently tight: the footprint is fixed, the historic overlay limits what can change, and the Painted Ladies turn over rarely. If you want walkable, intown, historic, and BeltLine adjacent in one address, this is the answer in Atlanta. If price sensitivity matters, look at Poncey-Highland or Reynoldstown next door, which give you adjacent walkability and a softer entry point.

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Highlights

What Makes Inman Park Distinctive

Atlanta's first planned suburb (1889)

Joel Hurt platted Inman Park in 1889 and connected it to downtown via Atlanta's first electric streetcar line. The original layout, the curving streets, and the lot pattern are still intact. Hurt later commissioned Frederick Law Olmsted to design Druid Hills, but Inman Park came first.

Painted Ladies and Queen Anne mansion stock

Edgewood Avenue and Euclid Avenue are lined with restored late-Victorian and Queen Anne homes, the so-called Painted Ladies. Decorative trim, turrets, wrap-around porches, and elaborate paint schemes. One of the deepest concentrations of intact 1890s residential architecture in the South.

BeltLine Eastside Trail runs through it

The Atlanta BeltLine Eastside Trail crosses Inman Park, which means residents step off their block onto a paved path that connects to Ponce City Market north, Krog Street Market and Reynoldstown south, and the rest of the Eastside corridor without driving.

Krog Street Market on the western edge

Krog Street Market is a five-minute walk from most of the neighborhood. Food hall, butcher, retail, and a regular calendar of events inside the renovated Atlanta Stove Works building. One of the original anchors of intown Atlanta's food-hall era.

MARTA Inman Park / Reynoldstown station

The Blue and Green line MARTA station sits on the southern edge of the neighborhood, giving residents direct rail access to Five Points, Decatur, downtown, and (via transfer) Hartsfield-Jackson Airport without driving.

Inventory is structurally tight

The historic district overlay, the fixed footprint, and long owner tenure on the Painted Ladies keep turnover low. Plan for a hunt rather than a quick pick, and assume the right house may not be on the public market when you start looking. We track off-market activity here closely.

Market Data

Inman Park real estate market.

$1.2M to $2MMedian Sale
30 to 60 daysAvg DOM
$450 to $600Price / sqft
Under 15 SFRActive Inventory
Living here

Living in Inman Park

Dining & Entertainment

Krog Street Market

Food hall and retail destination on the western edge of the neighborhood. Multiple restaurants, a butcher, and a steady calendar of events inside the renovated Atlanta Stove Works building. Walkable from most of Inman Park.

krogstreetmarket.com/

Highland Avenue and Euclid Avenue restaurants

The walkable village stretch along Highland Avenue and Euclid Avenue inside the neighborhood. Neighborhood-favorite restaurants, cafes, and bars at village scale.

Little Five Points dining

The Little Five Points commercial district is a short walk east. The Vortex, the Porter Beer Bar, La Fonda Latina, and a long list of independent options within a few blocks.

Beetlecat

Seafood restaurant from Ford Fry on Krog Street. A regular special-occasion option for the neighborhood.

Ponce City Market food hall

About a 5-minute drive or 15-minute BeltLine walk north. Multiple restaurants inside the renovated Sears building, plus the rooftop.

poncecitymarket.com/

Shopping & Services

Krog Street Market retail

Independent retail and specialty food alongside the food hall. Walkable from most of the neighborhood.

krogstreetmarket.com/

Little Five Points

Independent record stores, vintage shops, bookstores, and tattoo studios. A short walk east from most of Inman Park.

Inman Park Village

The walkable Highland and Euclid commercial cluster inside the neighborhood. Independent shops at village scale.

Ponce City Market

Whole Foods, the food hall, retail, and the rooftop, in the renovated Sears building a short drive or BeltLine walk north.

poncecitymarket.com/

Recreation & Parks

BeltLine Eastside Trail

Paved walking and biking trail that crosses Inman Park and connects north to Ponce City Market and south to Reynoldstown. The single biggest recreational asset in the neighborhood.

beltline.org/

Springvale Park

The neighborhood's own historic park, designed as part of Hurt's original 1889 plan. Walking paths, mature canopy, and a small pond. Quiet pause inside the residential blocks.

Freedom Park

210-acre linear park immediately north of Inman Park, with paved trails through tree canopy. Connects east toward Candler Park and west toward the Carter Center.

Piedmont Park

Atlanta's flagship park is a short drive or longer BeltLine ride west. The Active Oval, Lake Clara Meer, and the Botanical Garden.

piedmontpark.org/

Annual Events

Inman Park Festival

The neighborhood's signature annual event, run since 1971. Spring weekend with a parade down Edgewood, a juried artists market, the Tour of Homes, and live music. One of the longest-running neighborhood festivals in Atlanta.

inmanparkfestival.org/

Inman Park Tour of Homes

Annual home tour run alongside the festival, opening restored Victorian and Queen Anne homes to the public. Long-running architecture tour.

inmanparkfestival.org/

Atlanta BeltLine Lantern Parade

Annual September parade along the BeltLine Eastside Trail. Walkable from any block in Inman Park.

beltline.org/

Krog Street Market events

Year-round programming including seasonal markets, pop-ups, and live music inside and outside the food hall.

krogstreetmarket.com/
Architecture

Architecture in Inman Park

~25% of stock

Queen Anne and Painted Ladies

Asymmetrical massing, turrets and bays, wrap-around porches, decorative spindle work and shingle siding, elaborate exterior paint schemes. The signature housing style of the neighborhood, concentrated on Edgewood Avenue, Euclid Avenue, and the surrounding blocks. Built mostly between 1889 and 1905.

3,000–6,000+ sqft · $1.8M–$4M+ restored · 0.20–0.50 acres
~25% of stock

Victorian Cottage and Folk Victorian

Smaller-scale Victorian homes with steep gables, decorative trim, and front porches. Less elaborate than the Queen Annes but still distinctly late-19th-century. Generally 1,800 to 3,000 square feet on smaller lots than the leading streets.

1,800–3,000 sqft · $1.0M–$1.8M renovated · 0.15–0.30 acres
~25% of stock

Craftsman Bungalow

Front-gabled or side-gabled rooflines, deep front porches with tapered columns, exposed rafter tails, original heart pine floors. Built mostly between 1910 and 1930 as the neighborhood expanded beyond the original Victorian wave. Found across the secondary streets.

1,500–2,800 sqft · $900k–$1.5M renovated · 0.15–0.25 acres
~25% of stock

Modern Infill Townhome and Condo

Newer construction concentrated near the BeltLine and the MARTA station, generally on the perimeter of the neighborhood rather than the historic core. Three-story plans, rooftop decks, attached garages.

1,400–2,400 sqft · $400k–$900k · Townhome lot or condo unit
Schools

Inman Park Schools

Mary Lin Elementary School

Atlanta Public Schools, grades pre-K through 5. One of the highest-rated APS elementary catchments and a meaningful driver of home values in Inman Park. Confirm zone assignment with APS during due diligence, since boundaries can shift.

Inman Middle School

APS middle school, grades 6 through 8, serving the Mary Lin / Springdale Park / Centennial Place cluster. Confirm zone before relying on this assignment.

Midtown High School

APS high school, grades 9 through 12 (formerly Grady High School). International Baccalaureate program, competitive athletics, and arts programming. Located in Midtown a short drive from Inman Park.

Private school options near Inman Park include The Paideia School (immediately east in Druid Hills), Atlanta International School, and a short drive farther for The Westminster Schools, The Lovett School, and Pace Academy. Confirm tuition and admissions calendars directly with each school.

Getting Around

Getting Around Inman Park

Walk Score is in the high 80s to low 90s depending on the specific block. One of the highest-scored neighborhoods in intown Atlanta. Krog Street Market, Little Five Points, the Highland and Euclid village stretch, and the BeltLine are all within a 10-minute walk from most blocks.Walk Score
Bike Score is high. The BeltLine Eastside Trail crosses the neighborhood, and the curving residential streets are quiet enough for casual riding.Bike Score
Transit Score is moderate to high. The Inman Park / Reynoldstown MARTA station on the Blue and Green lines sits at the southern edge, and bus service runs along Edgewood, Highland, and DeKalb Avenue.Transit
CarPrimary mode

Inman Park is one of the few intown neighborhoods where a car-light life genuinely works. The MARTA Blue and Green line station at the southern edge connects directly to Five Points, downtown, Decatur, and (via transfer at Five Points) Hartsfield-Jackson Airport. The BeltLine Eastside Trail handles much of the daily north-south recreational and errand traffic. For trips outside the BeltLine corridor or the rail lines, residents drive, but a meaningful share of weekly life happens on foot, bike, or rail.

Typical commute times

Downtown Atlanta (Five Points) 8–12 min by car, ~7 min via MARTA
Midtown / Tech Square 10–15 min off-peak via Ponce or North Avenue
Buckhead 15–20 min off-peak via I-75/85 or Piedmont
Hartsfield-Jackson Airport 20–30 min by car, ~30 min via MARTA
Decatur 10–15 min by car, ~12 min via MARTA
Emory University 15–20 min off-peak via Ponce de Leon

I-75 and I-85 (the Connector) are reachable via Freedom Parkway or North Avenue, both within about 5 minutes. I-20 is similar via Boulevard south.

FAQ

Frequently asked questions.

What's the median home price in Inman Park?

Renovated historic single-family in Inman Park proper generally trades in the $1.2M to $2M range, with restored Painted Ladies and Queen Anne mansions on Edgewood and Euclid pushing well above that. Newer condos and townhomes on the perimeter run $400k to $900k. Inventory inside the neighborhood is structurally tight, often fewer than 15 single-family listings at any time.

How is the Inman Park market right now?

Closed sales over the last year have run roughly 30 to 60 days on market, with well-prepared listings on the leading streets moving faster and top-of-market historic restorations taking longer. Demand stays steady because of the BeltLine, the Mary Lin catchment, and the architectural stock. Many of the signature historic homes transfer privately before reaching the MLS, so the public stats only tell part of the story.

Is Inman Park walkable?

Yes, and at the top of intown Atlanta. Walk Score is in the high 80s to low 90s depending on the block. Krog Street Market, Little Five Points, the Highland and Euclid village stretch, and the BeltLine Eastside Trail are all within a 10-minute walk from most homes. The MARTA Inman Park / Reynoldstown station handles longer trips.

What schools are assigned to Inman Park?

Mary Lin Elementary, Inman Middle, and Midtown High School (formerly Grady) in Atlanta Public Schools. Mary Lin is one of the stronger APS elementary catchments and is a measurable driver of home values. Confirm current zone assignment with APS before relying on it for an offer, since boundaries can shift.

What architectural styles are common in Inman Park?

The signature stock is Queen Anne and Painted Ladies on Edgewood and Euclid, mostly built between 1889 and 1905. Smaller Victorian cottages and Folk Victorians make up another quarter of the homes. Craftsman bungalows from 1910 to 1930 are the third major group. Modern infill townhomes and condos near the BeltLine and the MARTA station round out the perimeter. The historic district overlay limits major exterior changes, which is part of why the architectural character has stayed intact for 135 years.

How does Inman Park compare to Virginia-Highland or Old Fourth Ward?

Virginia-Highland gives you more retail energy along North Highland Avenue and a slightly different architectural mix (more Craftsman, fewer Victorians). Old Fourth Ward gives you newer construction, more condo and loft inventory, and direct access to Ponce City Market, but less of the 19th-century single-family stock. Inman Park sits in the middle: historic architectural pedigree comparable to Druid Hills, walkability comparable to Virginia-Highland, BeltLine access comparable to Old Fourth Ward. Best fit depends on whether you prioritize the architectural stock, the price point, or the specific walkable amenities.

Why work with VCG to buy or sell in Inman Park?

We specialize in intown Atlanta neighborhoods, including the historic ones where a meaningful share of activity happens off-market. Inman Park is one of those. We can walk you through the block-by-block math, help you read the renovation gap on a specific home, and tell you which homes are quietly about to come up before they hit the MLS. For sellers, we'll talk through pricing scenarios for your specific street and the prep that pays off on this kind of historic stock.

Thinking about
Inman Park?

Thinking about Inman Park?

Get in touch

(678) 249-0839

vesta@vcgrealty.com

First Multiple Listing Service

Listing data provided by FMLS and/or Georgia MLS. Information deemed reliable but not guaranteed. All measurements and conditions should be independently verified. Disclaimer: fmls.com/dmca